Sunday, April 13, 2014

Often, people are only trying to help, and I always try to keep this
in mind when a non-stutterer says something that he or she thinks is
helpful, but is really not helpful at all. Some of them are downright
insulting...but, again, they don't know that, so, maybe this entry will help.
These are things not to say to someone who is stuttering or stammering. (The word stutter or stammer both mean the same thing. Stammer is a word that is often used in other countries, like those in the UK. I only use the word stutter.) If you aren't familiar with what stuttering or stammering is, please read this first: What is stuttering?

1. "Oh, we all stutter. I stutter sometimes, too."
- No, not everyone is a Persistent Developmental Stutterer. That's like
saying that just because sometimes you stumble over your own feet, you
also have Muscular Dystrophy. That would be an insulting and
disrespectful thing to say to someone suffering from MD, and it's also
not something you should say to someone with a stutter. I know people
are only trying to help, but saying this does not help.

2. "Just slow down. Relax. You'll stutter less." - Stuttering has nothing to do with the rate of speech and stutterers aren't necessarily uptight and in need of relaxation. Stuttering isn't caused by nervousness and nervous people don't necessarily stutter.
I stutter when I am very relaxed and I stutter when I am anxious and
uptight. There is no rhyme nor reason and this tip only makes me,
personally, feel that, not only am I stuttering, and you notice, you
perceive that I am the cause of my own stutter and if only I follow your
tip, I'll stop. Now can you see why this isn't helpful?

3. "Oh, it doesn't bother me!"
- I often get this when I express frustration over being unable to get
out what I want to say. While I do somewhat care how I come across to
others with my speech, my own stuttering bothers me, and I'm not really
thinking much at the time if I'm bothering you. Do you see? Saying that
it doesn't bother you...doesn't really help me. Again, I know the person
is only trying to be helpful, but this doesn't really help.

4. Completing my sentence for me or providing a word that I am struggling with.
- This is the response I most often get. Please. Don't do this. It's
very distressing because it makes me feel like that I am speaking so
badly that you think I need your help. I don't. If you just act
normal and don't make any indication that I am stuttering, I will feel
much better. If you try to help by completing a sentence for me, I am
going to be just that much more aware of my stutter. It would be like if
you saw someone with Muscular Dystrophy struggling to climb three
stairs and you suddenly ran up and picked them up and carried them up.
See? They would probably perceive that you were being impatient and
couldn't stand to watch them struggle.

5. "Stuttering is just a bad habit that can be broken".
- This one just annoys me. I had a caregiver who used to punch me in
the stomach when I was 6 years old when I stuttered in order to break
the "bad habit". It does not work. It's not a habit. It's a speech
impediment and has distinctive symptoms that can't be stopped with will
power. People who work to overcome stuttering work very hard to do so.
They may form habitual reactions to their stutter, like anxiousness or
self-conscious feelings, but the stutter itself is not a habit.

6. "Stuttering is caused by emotional trauma."
- Nobody knows what causes stuttering. While there are stutterers from
every walk of life and while some people have developed a stutter after a
very traumatic event like a car wreck, most stutterers have done so
since before they can remember and their histories are extremely varied.
There are no common denominators. Again: nobody knows what causes it.

7. "Oh, I read this book from this link that instantly cures stuttering!" -
Please do not suggest to me those "cures" that scam artists offer
online. None of them work. They are predatory creeps who write these
"eBooks" in order to get our $19.99 because they know that we are
desperate. The promise instant cures by some technique. Children, the
experts have been studying and researching this thing for decades. The
most highly trained speech pathologists and experts keep the National
Stuttering Association and others informed of the latest developments in
stuttering therapies, and none of the information they give include
instant cures. They do not exist.

Note:
There are many techniques that stutterers use to sound fluent. I use a
multitude of them, and if you are interested in hearing what they
are...I will write another entry later listing them and how I use them.
Most people I encounter do not know that I stutter. And that is because I
use these time-tested techniques. I also encounter many Proud Stutters
who have scolded me for using these techniques and who say I should be
proud and "out" and should stutter freely. Sorry, that's not for me. I
would no more do that than I would deny myself a wheel chair if I were a
paraplegic and drag myself across the floor...or deny myself the use of
glasses. My techniques are used to make me sound like everybody else,
just as glasses are designed so that I can see like everybody else. Make
sense?

8. It is not funny. -
Lastly, if you find the sound of someone stuttering to be funny, please
don't laugh and then apologize like that makes it okay. It's not funny
to the stutterer, I promise you. It only makes them feel as if they are
or sound like a freak. "I talk so badly, people can't help but laugh".
How do you think that feels? Someone very, very close to me used to do
this a lot, and they really didn't think anything of it and I still
wonder why. If I saw an impaired person and had the urge to laugh at
something that I found funny, I would get the hell out of there so that
person didn't see. I would be mortified if someone with a disability saw
me laughing at them. Have some social skills, please. It's not funny.
If you think it's so funny, watch this and tell me what's funny about
it.

3 comments:

Thanks a lot for sharing such a important tips to stop stuttering.your tips are really too good and definitely it will help a lot to all of us who stutter.now a days few medicine are also available to stop this problem you can also order this medicine online from

I was very impressed by this post, this site has always been pleasant news. Thank you very much for such an interesting post. Keep working, great job! In my free time, I like play game: mutilateadoll2game.com. What about you?

Wellsphere

Welcome!

Stuttering is one of the most mysterious conditions to strike humanity and it is one of the most frustrating. Millions of people are afflicted with this condition and struggle each day to navigate their lives while feeling ostracized, made fun of, held back or just different from the rest of the world.

I am an elementary teacher and a professionally covert stutterer who chose this route for professional reasons. This does not mean that I do not accept my stutter. I accept it as much as someone who only has one leg. Some people with only one leg will use a prosthetic to look and walk like people who have two legs. I use my fluency techniques for the very same reason: to sound like fluent speakers. That is my own personal choice and story, others choose a different route and their choices are just as valid. I make no judgments in this regard.

This blog is intended to let you share in my every day experiences and also to give information that may help others learn more about stuttering and to learn more about the real people who experience it every day. Please email me if you have something to say, a story to share, or just a link you'd like me to add. sign543@gmail.com